Macro Economics
HTW Berlin - Ülkü
HTW Berlin - Ülkü
Set of flashcards Details
Flashcards | 50 |
---|---|
Language | English |
Category | Macro-Economics |
Level | University |
Created / Updated | 04.03.2016 / 28.03.2016 |
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Microeconomics. (Definition)
The study of how households and firms make decisions. And how they interact in markets.
Macroeconomics. (Definition)
The study of economy-wide phenomena, including inflation, unemployment, and economic growth.
Gross Domestic Product (GDP) - What measures the GDP?
- measures total income of everyone in the economy.
- measures total expenditure on the economy’s output of goods and services.
GDP - Definition
Is the market value of all final goods & services produced within a country in a given period of time.
Whar are the components of GDP?
Recall : GDP is the total spending.
4 components.
- Consumption (C)
- Investment (I)
- Government Purchases (G)
- Net Exports (NX)
Consumption (C) - Definition
Consumption is total spending by households on goods and services..
Investment (I) - Definition
Investment is total spending on goods that will be used in the future to produce more goods.
includes spending on:
- capital equipment (e.g., machines, tools)
- structures (factories, office buildings, houses)
- inventories (goods produced but not yet sold)
Government Purchases (G) - Definition
Goverment Purchases is all spending on the g&s purchased by govt at the federal, state, and local levels.
- G excludes transfer payments, such as Social Security or unemployment insurance benefits. They are not purchases of goods and services..
Net Exports (NX) - Definition
NX = exports–imports
- Exports represent foreign spending on the economy’s goods and services.
- Imports are the portions of C, I, and G that are spent on goods and services produced abroad.
Adding up all the components of GDP
Y = C + I + G + NX
Nominal GDP
- values output using current prices
- notcorrected for inflation
Compute nominal GDP for each year: Price x Quantity (+ Price x Quantity) = GDP
Compute level of increase: (start value - end value) / start value x 100 = %
Real GDP
- values output using the prices of a base year
- is corrected for inflation
Compute real GDP in each year, using the Price from base year:
Price (base) x Quantity (+ Price (base) x Quanity) = GDP
GDP Deflator -Definition
The GDP deflator is a measure of the overall level of prices.
GDP Deflator = 100 x (nominal GDP / real GDP)
to measure the economy’s inflation rate is to compute the percentage increase in the GDP deflator from one year to the next.
GDP and Economic Well-Being
Real GDP per capita is the main indicator of the average person’s standard of living.
But GDP is not a perfect measure of well-being.
GDP does not value:
The quality of the environment
Leisure time
Non-market activity, such as the child care a parent provides his or her child at home
An equitable distribution of income
Inflation - Definition
Inflation is an increase in the general price level of goods and services in an economy over a period of time.
Inflation Rate - Definition
Percentage change of general price level in comparison to the previous period.
Consumer Price Index (CPI) - Definition
CPI measures the typical consumer’s cost of living
How the CPI is calculated
Fix a "basket" with all important goods and services and find out the prices.and compute the basket's cost.
CPI = 100 x (basket cost current year / basket cost base year)
Inflation Rate:
((CPI current year - CPI last year) / CPI last year) x 100
Real Interest Rate
corrected for inflation
the rate of growth in the purchasing power of a deposit or debt
Real Interest Rate = nominal interest rate – inflation rate
Nominal Interest Rate
the interest rate not corrected for inflation
the rate of growth in the dollar value of a deposit or debt
The 3 functions of money...
The 2 kinds of money...
Commodity money - definition
takes the form of a commodity with intrinsic value.
Exampels:Gold coins, cigarettes in POW camps
Fiat money - definition
money without intristic value, used as money because of govt decree
Example: U.S. dollar
Money supply (or money stock) - definition
the quantity of money aviable in the economy
What assets should be considered part of the money supply?
Fractional reserve banking system
Bank keep a fraction of deposits as reserves and use the rest to make loans
Reserve requirements
Regulation son the minimum amount of reserves that banks must hold against deposits
Money multiplyer
the amount of money the banking system generates with each dollar of reserves
Money supply - calculation
money supply = money multiplyer x bank reserves
Open-Market Operations (OMOs) - definition
The purchase and sale of U.S. goverment bonds by the Fed
How the fed influences the reserves
How the Fed influences the reserve ratio
Problems controlling the money supply
Closed economie
does not interact with other economies in the world
Open economy
interacts freely with other economies around the world
Exports
domestically - produced goods & services sold abroad
Imports
foreign - produced goods & services sold domestically
Net exports (NX) (trade balance)
= value of exports - value imprts